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16 results on '"Blest-Hopley G"'

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1. Increased hippocampal blood flow in people at clinical high risk for psychosis and effects of cannabidiol.

2. Hippocampal Glutamate, Resting Perfusion and the Effects of Cannabidiol in Psychosis Risk.

3. Cannabidiol attenuates insular activity during motivational salience processing in patients with early psychosis.

5. Task-independent acute effects of delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol on human brain function and its relationship with cannabinoid receptor gene expression: A neuroimaging meta-regression analysis.

6. Altered relationship between cortisol response to social stress and mediotemporal function during fear processing in people at clinical high risk for psychosis: a preliminary report.

7. Epigenetic Mediation of AKT1 rs1130233's Effect on Delta-9-Tetrahydrocannabinol-Induced Medial Temporal Function during Fear Processing.

8. Cannabidiol modulation of hippocampal glutamate in early psychosis.

9. Disrupted parahippocampal and midbrain function underlie slower verbal learning in adolescent-onset regular cannabis use.

10. Normalization of mediotemporal and prefrontal activity, and mediotemporal-striatal connectivity, may underlie antipsychotic effects of cannabidiol in psychosis.

11. Adolescent-onset heavy cannabis use associated with significantly reduced glial but not neuronal markers and glutamate levels in the hippocampus.

12. A single dose of cannabidiol modulates medial temporal and striatal function during fear processing in people at clinical high risk for psychosis.

13. Is the Adolescent Brain at Greater Vulnerability to the Effects of Cannabis? A Narrative Review of the Evidence.

14. A Systematic Review of Human Neuroimaging Evidence of Memory-Related Functional Alterations Associated with Cannabis Use Complemented with Preclinical and Human Evidence of Memory Performance Alterations.

15. Regular cannabis use is associated with altered activation of central executive and default mode networks even after prolonged abstinence in adolescent users: Results from a complementary meta-analysis.

16. Residual effects of cannabis use in adolescent and adult brains - A meta-analysis of fMRI studies.

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